Posted: Wed Apr 24, 2002 10:34 am
Oh, I see where you are coming from, Stilgar. AAA is the complete credit rating. It's not the initials for the bank.Originally posted by Stilgar
And the third A?
Cheers.
The Internet's authoritative role-playing game forum.
https://www.gamebanshee.com/forums/
Oh, I see where you are coming from, Stilgar. AAA is the complete credit rating. It's not the initials for the bank.Originally posted by Stilgar
And the third A?
Originally posted by Beldin
We get a lot of drunken ones in the holiday seasons each year.
Ah, der/die/das, den/die/das, dem/der/dem...brings back school memories, on an order with the greater horror films of the 1930s.Originally posted by Beldin
The "article" -
Der - the (he)
Die - the (she)
Das - the (it)
Des - its
German grammar is also difficult for german pupils...english is WAY easier to handle...and what I like in the english language is its inexhaustible possibilities of hidden meanings, one line jokes and plays on words. German is to "dry" and sleek and a lot less funny to read...IMHO...Originally posted by fable
Ah, der/die/das, den/die/das, dem/der/dem...brings back school memories, on an order with the greater horror films of the 1930s.I *do* like the sound of German its sleek design and clean structure. But the intricacies of its grammatical rules are rather off-putting.
![]()
I'm glad I'm from Austria then...Originally posted by Rob-hin
![]()
You get a lot of drunken Hollanders?!
Come see our beaches in the summer. Germans digging holes everywhere!![]()
![]()
I like all languages - German sounds great in some contexts, for instance the great operasOriginally posted by Stilgar
But maybe you're right i don;t like the dutch language that much. But I don;t like German either, i think it's a real ugly language, i can;t realy explain why.
I think English is a great language, it has more words (that's true for some English words i can't think of a normal dutch word) and it's prenounched (i think i misspelled thisone) better then Dutch (or German)
I wrack it up to the differences among cultures raised on varying degrees of lookalike television shows and great native literature. Hell, most Americans have probably never even heard of JD Sallinger, led alone read Franny and Zooey or Catcher in the Rye. I'll bet the most cultural thing Brits generally read, too, is the Sunday paper.Originally posted by C Elegans
I like all languages - German sounds great in some contexts, for instance the great operasDutch is totally incomprihensible to me, but I sort of like the harsh sound of it.
Like you, I love English and the enourmous amount of words it has - 5 times more than Swedish, my 1st language. However, according to linguistic studies, the average Swede has twice as many words in his/her active vocabulary than the average Brit, and the the Brits in their turn have twice as many as the Americans. This is strange in such a rich language![]()
Let's hope that Sunday paper is not The SunOriginally posted by fable
I wrack it up to the differences among cultures raised on varying degrees of lookalike television shows and great native literature. Hell, most Americans have probably never even heard of JD Sallinger, led alone read Franny and Zooey or Catcher in the Rye. I'll bet they don't the most cultural thing Brits generally read, too, is the Sunday paper.![]()
Nah, probably the Sunday SportOriginally posted by C Elegans
Let's hope that Sunday paper is not The Sun
Hello Georgi, nice to see youOriginally posted by Georgi
Nah, probably the Sunday Sport![]()
![]()
![]()
Originally posted by C Elegans
With the risk of sounding very generalising, I would say that Swede's at group level aren't cultural or intellectual at all - rather I think the Swedish society is quite anti-intellectual
Me and my brother play this game where we say a word and then the other has to use the last letter of that word to begin another word and then it follows on from there. It is kind of fun (in a sad geeky wayOriginally posted by C Elegans
Like you, I love English and the enourmous amount of words it has - 5 times more than Swedish, my 1st language. However, according to linguistic studies, the average Swede has twice as many words in his/her active vocabulary than the average Brit, and the the Brits in their turn have twice as many as the Americans. This is strange in such a rich language![]()